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      Sample size in qualitative research

      Research in Nursing & Health
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          A common misconception about sampling in qualitative research is that numbers are unimportant in ensuring the adequacy of a sampling strategy. Yet, simple sizes may be too small to support claims of having achieved either informational redundancy or theoretical saturation, or too large to permit the deep, case-oriented analysis that is the raison-d'être of qualitative inquiry. Determining adequate sample size in qualitative research is ultimately a matter of judgment and experience in evaluating the quality of the information collected against the uses to which it will be put, the particular research method and purposeful sampling strategy employed, and the research product intended.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Research in Nursing & Health
          Res. Nurs. Health
          Wiley
          01606891
          1098240X
          April 1995
          April 1995
          : 18
          : 2
          : 179-183
          Article
          10.1002/nur.4770180211
          7899572
          46ff898a-bd3c-4495-8f08-ca487afc35a9
          © 1995

          http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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